Elizabeth Rawson

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About Elizabeth Rawson

Born in Montgomery, Virginia, USA on 1807 to William Coffin and Mary Duncan. Elizabeth married Horace Strong Rawson and had 12 children. She passed away on 1890 in Salt Lake City, Utah, USA.

Member of the "Wilford Woodruff Company" Mormon Wagon train from Council Bluffs to to Salt Lake City

Wilford Woodruff Company 1850 Company Information Wilford Woodruff Company

   Departure 14-16 June 1850
   Arrival 14 October 1850
   Number In Company 172

About 209 individuals and about 44 wagons were in the company when it began its journey from the outfitting post at Kanesville, Iowa (present day Council Bluffs). Read Full Narrative »

View a list of individuals known to have traveled in this company. Sources

   "Emigration Closed," Deseret News [Weekly], 19 Oct. 1850, 140.
   Trail Excerpt
   Source Location
   Church History Library, Salt Lake City, Utah
   University of Utah, J. Willard Marriott Library, Salt Lake City, Utah

Branch, William Henry, Sr., [Diary], in Olive Branch Millburn, comp., A History, Diary and Genealogy of William Henry Branch, Sr., 8-19.

   Source Location
   Harold B. Lee Library, Brigham Young University, Provo, Utah
   Church History Library, Salt Lake City, Utah
   Family History Library, Salt Lake City, Utah

Burns, Enoch, [Autobiography], in "Biography of Henrietta E. C. Williams and Enoch Burns. Copied by the Brigham Young University Library, 1953," 62.

   Trail Excerpt
   Source Location
   Church History Library, Salt Lake City, Utah

Deseret News [Weekly], 5 Oct. 1850, 134.

   Trail Excerpt
   Source Location
   Church History Library, Salt Lake City, Utah
   University of Utah, J. Willard Marriott Library, Salt Lake City, Utah

Gallup, Luke William, Reminiscences and diary 1842 May-1891 Mar., 122-41.

   Trail Excerpt
   Source Location
   Church Archives, Salt Lake City, Utah

Gardner, George Bryant, [Autobiography], in James Albert Jones, comp., Some Early Pioneers of Huntington, Utah and Surrounding Area [1980], 90.

   Trail Excerpt
   Source Location
   Harold B. Lee Library, Brigham Young University, Provo, Utah
   Church History Library, Salt Lake City, Utah

Gibson, Jacob, Book of the generations of Jacob Gibson 1849-1881, [43-45].

   Trail Excerpt

Goodridge, Sophia Lois, Journal.

   Trail Excerpt
   Source Location
   Church Archives, Salt Lake City, Utah

Patten, George, Reminiscences, 3. (Trail excerpt transcribed from "Pioneer History Collection" available at Pioneer Memorial Museum [Daughters of Utah Pioneers Museum], Salt Lake City, Utah. Some restrictions apply.)

   Trail Excerpt
   Source Location
   Pioneer Memorial Museum (Daughters of Utah Pioneers Museum), Salt Lake City, Utah

Rawson, Arthur Morrison, “The Family of Arthur Morrison Rawson and Margaret Angeline Pace,” 1.

   Trail Excerpt
   Source Location
   Internet Web Site

Woodruff, Wilford, Journal, 1847 Jan.-1853 Dec., box 2, fd. 3, in Journals and papers, 1828-1898.

   Trail Excerpt
   Source Location
   Church Archives, Salt Lake City, Utah

Narrative In early 1850, Church leaders advised emigrants that pioneer companies would travel on a new route on the south side of the Platte River. By taking this new route they avoided some river crossings on the north side that had proved dangerous because of high water in the previous year. They also expected to receive additional military protection on a new army supply road. This was a factor in their decision because they wanted to avoid conflict with the Plains Indians, who had been agitated during the 1849 California gold rush. The 200-mile long army road connected "Old Fort Kearny," located 50 miles below Kanesville on the Missouri River, to "New Fort Kearny" following the south side of the Platte River to the west.

Outfitted emigrants traveled 18 miles south from Kanesville on the east bank of the Missouri River to the Bethlehem Ferry (across the river from present-day Plattsmouth, Nebraska). In mid-June they began ferrying over and assembling on the west bank of the river. Wilford Woodruff called the camp together and organized the company on June 21. The next day 209 people and 44 wagons started out, following the Plattsmouth-Fort Kearny trail south. After crossing Weeping Water Creek they followed a new trail west where they connected with the northward-arching new military road, which became known as the Ox-Bow Trail.

The company was somewhat spread out with the 1st and 2nd Fifties led by Leonard Hardy and Edson Whipple. Elder Woodruff, traveling with the 1st Fifty, crossed Salt Creek on June 28. After leaving Salt Creek they turned west on a cutoff trail (near present-day Swedesburg, Nebraska). All of the companies except Andrus used this cutoff (which passed near present-day David City and Bellwood, Nebraska). This cutoff trail, which bypassed the Cottonwood/Wahoo Creek drainage, saved them 12 miles. On this shortcut route, they reached the Platte about 20 miles west of the regular route taken earlier by Andrus. During this early leg of the journey, a number of people died from cholera.

The two divisions reunited on July 7 on the Platte. They followed the south bank of the Platte River a hundred miles west past Grand Island, where they joined with the Oregon Trail coming north from Missouri. At this juncture they continued 15 more miles to "New Fort Kearny", which they reached on July 15, although army reserved grazing rights and companies weren't permitted to camp within a mile of the fort. On this day they were visited by a tremendous thunderstorm, and lightning killed three oxen and one member of the company. They continued up the south side and miraculously escaped any serious accident or wagon breakage during an exciting wagon stampede on July 30. The next day they reached the Upper Crossing of the South Platte (located about three miles west of present-day Brule, Nebraska). They finished crossing here on August 1 and followed a long dry ridge for 20 miles to Ash Hollow on the south bank of the North Platte.

From Ash Hollow they traveled up the Platte River, arriving at Fort Laramie on August 18. Leaving there, they skirted the Black Hills by taking the river road. They were delayed some days looking for lost cattle but reached the Upper Crossing (at present-day Casper, Wyoming) on September 3. Along much of the road west from Fort Laramie until they reached the Sweetwater, they found little grass, which caused their cattle to wander and slowed their pace. They reached Devil's Gate on September 8. On September 14 they bypassed the established road over the Rocky Ridges by veering to the north through a draw. This variant road, scouted out by J.A. Stratton and three other men who were sent out by Brigham Young to locate better routes and help guide the companies to the Salt Lake Valley, it reportedly had an abundance of feed and water. Unfortunately, Elder Woodruff found no feed or water and said that companies should not take that road.

They rejoined the established road just east of Rock Creek. One day west of South Pass they met with a war party of 500 Snake Indians, but were able to avoid conflict. They crossed the Green River on September 23 and reached Fort Bridger on September 27. Some in the 1st Fifty began murmuring, Elder Woodruff advised that division to move on ahead of them to the valley. Woodruff's Fifty found the road very rough between Big and Little Mountain but reached Salt Lake on October 14. Deaths in the company numbered at least 17, many from cholera.

References: http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=26392807

http://history.lds.org/overlandtravels/companyDetail?lang=eng&compa...

http://history.lds.org/overlandtravels/pioneerDetail?lang=eng&pione...

view all 21

Elizabeth Rawson's Timeline

1807
October 18, 1807
Montgomery, Virginia
1826
October 8, 1826
Washington, Indiana
1827
December 16, 1827
Washington County, Indiana, United States
1830
April 26, 1830
Randolph, Indiana
1832
January 13, 1832
Randolph, Randolph, IN, United States
1832
Age 24
1832
Age 24
1834
March 15, 1834
Lafayette, Missouri
March 15, 1834
Lafayette, Missouri